Slabs of steel are laid down in the work yard at Washington's Port of Vancouver.
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Slabs of steel are laid down in the work yard at Washington's Port of Vancouver.

Molly Solomon/OPB

It's a normal weekday at the Port of Vancouver. That means by noon, piles of steel slab cover the work yard at the docks on the Columbia River.

"Steel is tied to about a third of our revenue. So that's pretty substantial," says Abbi Russell, communications manager for the Port of Vancouver in Washington state, the second-largest importer of steel products on the West Coast. In 2017, the port unloaded 712,834 metric tons of steel.

Some steel manufacturers around the U.S. say the Trump administration's tariffs will let them create jobs. But on the West Coast, many ports rely on steel from Pacific Rim countries that are subject to the tariffs.

The tariffs have drawn criticism from factories, economists and even Republican Rep. Jaime Hererra Beutler, who represents southwest Washington — a region where many counties flipped for Trump and voted Republican in 2016. One of those did so for the first time since Herbert Hoover was elected in 1928.

Longshoremen at the Port of Vancouver unload large steel slabs from a ship. The port is the second-largest importer of steel products on the entire West Coast.
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Longshoremen at the Port of Vancouver unload large steel slabs from a ship. The port is the second-largest importer of steel products on the entire West Coast.

Molly Solomon/OPB

In a letter to the president, Herrera Beutler urged the administration to reconsider the tariffs. She said they will drive up costs for companies in nearby towns that make products from imported steel.

Rows of imported steel coil from Australia and Japan are lined up on the assembly line at Steelscape in Kalama, Washington. The company imports raw materials and turns them into galvanized steel used on building exteriors and for large appliances.
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Rows of imported steel coil from Australia and Japan are lined up on the assembly line at Steelscape in Kalama, Washington. The company imports raw materials and turns them into galvanized steel used on building exteriors and for large appliances.

Molly Solomon/OPB

One of them is Steelscape, a steel-coating plant with facilities in Southern California and Kalama, Washington.

"None of us make our own steel so we're totally reliant on raw materials coming in," says Scott Cooley, the vice president of sales and customer service for Steelscape.

Steelscape turns those raw materials into components of buildings and large appliances.

Cooley said the tariffs could hit his company hard and may force Steelscape to look across the Rockies for domestic steel in the Midwest. But the company says transporting steel by rail costs $65 more per ton than steel arriving by ship from Asian countries.

Most of the imported steel comes from Asian countries that are subject to the president's 25 percent tariff.
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Most of the imported steel comes from Asian countries that are subject to the president's 25 percent tariff.

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"It's why none of the mills back East really supplied any of the mills out West," he says.

Cooley says the impacts of the tariffs will be felt far beyond his own company."You're talking about all the customer base that's on the West Coast that's reliant on steel produced in market," says Cooley. "If all that has to start coming from the East, it is going to cause prices to go up."

Forklift driver Rick Anderson has worked at the Port of Vancouver for more than two decades. He says most weeks, all he hauls from the port is steel.
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Forklift driver Rick Anderson has worked at the Port of Vancouver for more than two decades. He says most weeks, all he hauls from the port is steel.

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At the Port of Vancouver, longshoremen are unloading a ship from Korea that's filled with giant rectangular slabs of steel.

Forklift driver Rick Anderson says for the past three weeks, all he has hauled is steel. And while he understands the benefits to the steel industry in Rust Belt states, he worries it will translate into layoffs for workers in the West.

"We're all about putting Americans to work. We'd love to export more than we import," says Anderson. "But the problem is it's just not going to work here in the Northwest."

Anderson says that a lot of his colleagues have been on edge since the president announced the tariffs.